Not all league organizations are in it for profit. ACS is a non-profit organization. [...]
Do you think that passionate people with vision somehow get corrupted when they check a box on their tax returns?
Did you know that Merryl Streep is a for-profit actor?
I own and operate a for-profit business right now. I'm also on the board of directors (chaired it for four years) of a $20 million non-profit organization.
Before I started my business, I ran a local monthly pool tournament series for a couple years, organized and ran a straight pool league, prepared instructional videos and put them on youtube, and developed a new system for rating players. There was no money involved.
Now I have a big billiard parlor. We have 35 league teams and another 50 people per week playing in weekly tournaments. We're running a $3,000 added tournament this weekend on the 7' tables. We do instruction and try to find ways to get new folks into the game. Of course the numbers have to work out. They do for any organization.
But the key is I AM THE SAME PERSON. I don't somehow now think of things in terms of dollars. I think the same way I did before. And I've spent hours on the phone with Mark Griffin. And I've had my friend Randy G. multiple times as a house guest. If you think these people are motivated by money rather than vision, then you imo are displaying an extraordinary lack of insight.
As to the finances of pool league for a player, there are many things to consider. If you play pool league at Fargo Billiards, then you pay $12 each week.
And this is what you get.
(1) Free table time all day on league day. That included before league, during league, and after league. (More than half the players are still around three hours after the league matched are done).
(2) You play your match on two clean diamond tables that are more than six-feet apart, have simonis cloth, balls cleaned every use.
(3) knowledgable staff
(4) free drink
(5) A $300 (per person) contribution to your travel fund for ANY player who goes to Vegas for either singles or team
(6) A payout for every team that ranges from about $300 to about $1,000 (per four-person team) for a 15-team division.
(7) A player appreciation night with a big spread of free food, keg of beer, fun scotch-doubles head-to-head speed pool events and other competitions, and many giveaways.
(8) A team tournament with $1500 added.
(9) A free hour of pool to be used during the week for every table run.